Sundin, Canucks come up empty again against Devils

The Vancouver Canucks signed the veteran center with hopes of
receiving an offensive boost and surviving the period of time
that star netminder Roberto Luongo has missed with injury.

So far, though, Sundin and the Canucks have suffered from
constant lapses on the defensive end and the team's chemistry
suffered another blow during Tuesday's 5-3 flop to the New
Jersey Devils.

"Tonight, obviously, our start wasn't what we expected," Canucks
coach Alain Vigneault said. "A few of those chances that they
got or goals that they got were off turnovers from our players.
In general, we're far from giving up more chances defensively.
We're solid and we're keeping our chances below 12 against a
game. We're at exactly what we're doing before. It's a little
bit more challenging right now. The opposition seems to be
finding ways to score goals against us."

All-Star Zach Parise, Dainius Zubrus and Travis Zajac each had a
goal and an assist while Brian Gionta and Brian Rolston added
tallies as the Devils bounced back from a loss and improved to
2-1-0 on their current season-high, six-game road swing.

Alex Burrows, Pavol Demitra and Steve Bernier netted goals and
Sundin notched his first assist of the season, but the Canucks
suffered their fifth consecutive home loss.

"We know how we need to play," Canucks center Ryan Kesler said.
"For whatever reason, we came out flat. That first period was
terrible and we all know that. I thought we did a pretty good
job in the second coming back and unfortunately just came up
short. That being said, having a first period like that we
didn't deserve to win like that."

A nine-time All-Star, Sundin inked a one-year contract with
Vancouver after much speculation and skated in an NHL game for
the first time in nine months during its 4-2 win at Edmonton on
Wednesday. Since then, the Canucks are winless in three
straight games and have been outscored, 15-9.

"Obviously we're facing some adversity," Vigneault said. "We
have faced adversity in the past and we've responded.
Obviously, we're facing a good deal right now with healthy guys
coming back in the lineup, Roberto not being far away, we've
held together in the past and gotten it done and I'm very
confident that this group will be able to do the same thing here
in the future."

Sundin scored a goal in Vancouver's 4-2 setback against the
Western Conference-leading San Jose Sharks on Saturday, yet
there have been rumors his high-profile arrival has disrupted a
club in dire need of Luongo's return.

Luongo has been out since November 22 and may return for
Thursday's game against Phoenix or Sunday's contest versus
Columbus.

"He's going to practice (Wednesday) and see how he feels,"
Vigneault said. "I think he left it up to me, but (Wednesday)
is five weeks and he's only had one practice with the group. I
think the smart and cautious thing to do is to give him another.
He had a really hard day today with (Canucks goaltending
consultant) Ian (Clark). He's going to have another good
practice (Wednesday) and we'll see how he feels."

Jason LaBarbera, who was acquired via trade earlier in the month
to ease pain of losing Luongo, was dreadfully exposed as Rolston
opened the scoring 65 seconds into the contest and Parise struck
for his team-leading 25th goal of the season 2:24 later.

"I think you're always a little surprised when you get yanked,"
LaBarbera said. "First goal was pretty bad. Second goal, I
probably could have played it better. You'd like to stay in
there and battle but, at the same time, we looked pretty slow."

Gionta ballooned New Jersey's lead to 3-0 with 9:53 left in the
session, taking a pass from Zubrus, who took advantage of a
turnover by Sanford.

"Teams are taking advantage of our mistakes," Kesler said.
"We're making quite a few right now. As I've said, we've got to
turn this thing around."

After Burrows cut the deficit to 3-1 in the second, the Devils
padded their lead once again as Zajac converted passes from
captain Jamie Langenbrunner and Parise 4:19 into the third.

"That was great," Zajac said. "We had all four lines going. We
competed hard and we controlled the play and that's what we
wanted to do."

Demitra and Bernier solved Scott Clemmsensen within a
five-minute span in the third, but Vancouver's comeback was
subdued when Zubrus deposited an empty-netter with 39 seconds
remaining.

"They came back and we held them off," Rolston said. "It was a
good two points for our team."

Patrik Elias and Langenbrunner notched two assists apiece in
support of Clemmensen, who made 26 saves.

"We haven't been playing that well lately so for us to get a win
was important, regardless of how we did it," Clemmensen said.
"We were kind of up and down a little bit most of the game.
Obviously, we started up and, like I said, it was up and down
for most of the game. We finished down but we got the win so
that's the most important thing."